The ATP4- receptor of rat mast cells
- PMID: 6162453
- PMCID: PMC1161963
- DOI: 10.1042/bj1880789
The ATP4- receptor of rat mast cells
Abstract
The concentration-dependence on exogenous ATP of activation and inhibition of mast-cell histamine secretion, phosphatidylinositol labelling and leakage of metabolites shows that all these functions are regulated by the free acid ATP4-. Maximal histamine secretion and phosphatidylinositol labelling occur with ATP4- at approx. 2 microM, but higher concentrations, which cause inhibition of secretion and phosphatidylinositol labelling, are required to maximize leakage of 32P-labelled metabolites. Both enhancement and inhibition of phosphatidylinositol labelling (due to low and high concentrations of ATP4- respectively) are rapid in onset; histamine secretion is characterized by a delay, especially at low concentrations of ATP4- (approx. 1 microM). Phosphatidylinositol labelling and histamine secretion are dependent on extracellular Ca2+. Metabolite leakage due to the presence of exogenous ATP4- is slow and does not require Ca2+. Of 18 analogues of ATP that were tested, only four were agonists for secretion, and only these four permitted leakage of 32P-labelled metabolites. It is argued that activation and inhibition of histamine secretion, phosphatidylinositol labelling and metabolite leakage are all initiated by ATP4- acting at the same receptor. For mast cells stimulated with ATP4- enhancement of phosphatidylinositol metabolism is not sufficient by itself to cause Ca2+-dependent secretion.
Comment in
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Purinergic signaling in infection and autoimmune disease.Biomed J. 2016 Oct;39(5):304-305. doi: 10.1016/j.bj.2016.09.002. Epub 2016 Oct 27. Biomed J. 2016. PMID: 27884376 Free PMC article.
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